Oct 14, 2014 - Wages for these workers are lower than for direct-hire parts workers and are not included in the official
Manufacturing Low Pay: Declining Wages in the Jobs That Built America’s Middle Class Catherine Ruckelshaus & Sarah Leberstein November 2014
Contents Executive Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 1. Communities are racing to create “good jobs in manufacturing” . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. “Onshoring” has sparked a resurgence of U.S. manufacturing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3. Manufacturing wages are in decline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4. Case Study: The changing nature of automotive work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 5. Heavy reliance on staffing agencies obscures much deeper problems in manufacturing . . . . . . . . . 13 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Endnotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Acknowledgements NELP thanks the Public Welfare Foundation, the Kellogg Foundation, the Ford Foundation, and the Surdna Foundation for their support of this work. We also thank the Center for Economic and Policy Research for providing data research and analysis for this report.
About NELP For more than 45 years, the National Employment Law Project has worked to restore the promise of economic opportunity for working families across America. In partnership with grassroots and national allies, NELP promotes policies to create good jobs, enforce hard-won workplace rights, and help unemployed workers regain their economic footing. For more information, visit us at www.nelp.org.
Executive Summary Americans perceive manufacturing jobs
There has been a resurgence in the number
as “good jobs.”
of auto industry jobs since the economic crisis
> Nine out of ten Americans believe that a strong
peaked in 2009.
manufacturing base is very important to our country’s
> The auto industry has added nearly 350,000 jobs
standard of living, according to a poll conducted by
and invested $38 billion in U.S. facilities since 2009,
the consulting firm Deloitte for the Manufacturing
which indicates a long-term commitment to building
Institute. When asked what type of facility they would
vehicles here. As long as vehicles are assembled in the
support to bring jobs to their community, a manufac-
United States, the economic benefits of a just-in-time
turing plant was at the top of the list.
manufacturing base ensures that jobs at many parts suppliers are also likely to remain in the country,
Manufacturing wages now rank in the bottom
even if wages rise.
half of all jobs in the United States. > While in the past, manufacturing workers earned
New jobs created in the auto sector are worse
a wage significantly higher than the U.S. average,
than the ones we lost.
by 2013 the average factory worker made 7.7 percent
> In 5 of the 10 “Auto Alley” states—Michigan,
below the median wage for all occupations.
Indiana, Ohio, South Carolina, and Tennessee—new hires at auto parts plants are paid roughly one-quarter
The perception that manufacturing jobs
less than the other auto parts workers in the state.
are highly paid disguises how many workers
> In 6 of the 10 Auto Alley states—Alabama,
are stuck at the bottom.
Mississippi, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, and Illinois—
> Today, more than 600,000 manufacturing workers
auto parts workers saw real monthly earnings decline
make just $9.60 per hour or less. More than 1.5 million
between 2001 and 2013. Alabama saw the steepest
manufacturing workers—one out of every four—
decline—24 percent—over that period.
make $11.91 or less. Heavy reliance on temporary workers hides Manufacturing wages are not even keeping
even bigger declines in manufacturing wages.
up with inflation.
> About 14 percent of auto parts workers are employed
> Real wages for manufacturing workers declined
by staffing agencies today. Wages for these workers
by 4.4 percent from 2003 to 2013—almost three times
are lower than for direct-hire parts workers and are
faster than for workers as a whole.
not included in the official industry-specific wage data cited above.
In the largest segment of the manufacturing base—
> Estimates based on U.S. Census Bureau data,
automotive—wages have declined even faster.
however, indicate that auto parts workers placed by
> Real wages for auto parts workers, who now account
staffing agencies make, on average, 29 percent less than
for three of every four autoworker jobs, fell by nearly
those employed directly by auto parts manufacturers.
14 percent from 2003 to 2013—three times faster than for manufacturing as a whole, and nine times faster than the decline for all occupations. > The growth in the number of auto parts jobs is cause for concern, because the typical parts worker makes one-third less than the typical auto assembly worker, and puts downward pressure on the higher assembly wages.
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Introduction
P
oliticians, economists, and other promoters tout increased investment by manufacturers, the
benefits of direct and “value added” industry cluster jobs flowing from manufacturing plants, and the overall economic boost that manufacturing jobs bring to local economies. This narrative creates a sometimes-intense competition among states for manufacturers in the form of subsidies and tax breaks for the perceived benefits. And while the manufacturing sector has been resurging in the last few years, growing by 4.3 percent between 2010 and 2012, the jobs that are returning are not the ones that were lost: wages are lower, the jobs are increasingly temporary, and the promised benefits have yet to be realized. This report will trace some of the drivers of this anemic rebound in manufacturing and its largest sector, auto manufacturing. “Onshoring” of jobs by manufacturers is on the rise in the United States; jobs are rebound-
placed via staffing and temporary agencies that pay
ing here due to a combination of a wage convergence
lower wages. The report uses state data from the “Auto
between domestic and international jobs and aggressive
Alley” states—Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,
supports from U.S. states. At the same time, the decline
Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina,
in relative wages in the manufacturing sector is strik-
and Tennessee—to provide more refined information
ing: in the last decades, wages in the sector have fallen
regarding lower earnings and wages in auto jobs.
behind private-sector pay, so that wages for production workers in manufacturing are now more than 4.0
Workers profoundly feel these shifts. Phillip Hicks
percent less than the private-sector average, and they
explained to The Washington Post that his only option
continue to decline.
for a job at a Toyota plant in Georgetown, Kentucky was through the staffing agency Manpower, Inc. Manpower
While the manufacturing sector has grown in recent years, wages are lower, the jobs are increasingly temporary, and promised benefits have yet to be realized.
assured Hicks that he would be able to switch to Toyota payroll after a year or two, promising a doubling of his salary from $12.60 to $24.20 an hour and gaining benefits.1 But after four years, Hicks was still waiting for a permanent employee position, unable to afford health benefits for his family or take more than three days off per year without risking his job, because of a punitive
Auto manufacturing trends track those of manufactur-
leave policy that only applied to “temps.”2
ing overall; the sector is enjoying a rebound in jobs since the auto crisis, but the replacement jobs pay
If these wage trends continue, manufacturing and auto
substantially lower wages. While part of the reason for
jobs will not deliver on the promise of creating livable
lower average auto wages is due to the relative increase
jobs with positive economic revivals in communities
in workers in parts plants that pay less than the assem-
and for families.
bly plants, the replacement jobs are also increasingly
2
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Communities are racing to create “good jobs in manufacturing” overnment policymakers and state and local economic development agencies see manufactur-
ing jobs as important to economic growth because they create a ripple effect, generating additional jobs
The perceived importance of manufacturing jobs leads to state competition and generous subsidies. States and towns compete fiercely to lure manufactur-
in other manufacturers that supply a plant, as well as
ing plants with generous subsidies that strain public
in restaurants and retail, transportation and logistics,
budgets. These large public subsidies are premised,
and white-collar professional services that support
and largely supported locally, on the expectation that
the plant. Manufacturing jobs are thus highly sought
companies will create good manufacturing jobs that
after by our federal and state policymakers, lauded as
boost the local economy, both through jobs at the plant
“advanced industries” that generate investments, create
itself as well as those that arise in the network of
a high number of direct and indirect jobs, enhance
suppliers that serve it and beyond. Yet, subsidies that
worker skills, and generate additional economic activity
taxpayers were asked to support have not always deliv-
in related industries.3
ered the good jobs that employers promised and the states expected.
In addition, the general public perceives that manufacturing jobs can uplift the economy by delivering good jobs and generating additional employment in related support industries. Recent poll results show that respondents think that manufacturing is the most important job sector, in terms of strengthening the
Subsidies that taxpayers were asked to support have not always delivered the good jobs that employers promised and states expected.
economy.4 During election seasons in particular, many public-office-seekers resolve to create and promote
Subsidy programs have included a broad array of
manufacturing jobs, scheduling photo-ops in front
supports, including corporate income tax credits (for
of manufacturing plants with workers and business
job creation, capital investment, research and devel-
owners. And our public policymakers promote manu-
opment), cash grants, low-cost or forgivable loans,
facturers as saviors for still-struggling local economies,
enterprise zones, reimbursement for workers’ training
luring them with subsidies and state welcome mats. 5
expenses, and other types of company-specific state assistance.6 Companies may also receive property tax
Recent poll results show that respondents think that manufacturing is the most important job sector, in terms of strengthening the economy.
abatements, whose cost is borne by local taxpayers and comes at the potential expense of other goods and services.7 But many subsidy programs come with few meaningful conditions: many require little if any job creation; fewer than half provide any kind of wage standard for the workers in subsidized companies; and
Thanks to global market forces and aggressive courting
fewer than a quarter require any level of health cov-
and subsidies by the federal government and states,
erage.8 Moreover, subsidy programs aimed at creating
some manufacturing jobs are rebounding, but the qual-
new jobs tend to attach wage and benefits standards
ity of too many of the returning jobs is low and fails to
only to full-time, permanent positions, and have not
live up to workers’ and the overall public’s expectations.
consistently applied those standards to part-time and temporary workers or contractors within the subsidized company.9
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Dozens of large manufacturing companies have come to expect states to undertake worker-training responsibilities in exchange for creating jobs, even when the companies have the financial capabilities to train workers themselves.10 If the training is too narrowly focused on a low-wage temporary job, the state’s investment may have no lasting benefit to workers, who are not any more prepared to get a better-paying and higher-skilled job.11 The costs to local and state budgets are staggering. Notable deals have included the following: • A nearly $1.3 billion package to Nissan to build a Canton, Mississippi plant in 2001, including a controversial 25-year state tax rebate for jobs that, in many cases, start at just $12 per hour; • A $1 billion subsidy package for ThyssenKrupp to build a steel plant in Mobile, Alabama;12 • A 2007 package deal for Alcoa worth $5.6 billion, giving a 30-year discounted electricity deal for an
makers were expanding their operations in the United
aluminum plant;
States, especially in southern “right to work” states,
• A $3.2 billion deal in tax breaks and other subsidies
to take advantage of what had now become relatively
for Boeing’s aircraft manufacturing facilities in
cheap U.S. labor and to avoid rising shipping costs.16
2003; and
Companies also may accept subsidies even as they
13
• A 2006 deal with Kia Motors brokered by Georgia
choose sites for their proximity to markets, as Toyota
Governor Sonny Perdue, worth $410 million and esti-
did in 2003 when it chose to locate a new assembly
mated to cost about $160,000 for each of the projected
plant in San Antonio, passing up more generous subsi-
direct jobs at the plant.14
dies to build in other locations because of the new site’s access to the large Texas market for pick-up trucks to be
Taxpayers may find that they have been essentially asked to subsidize a large company whose promise of good jobs never materializes.
built at the plant.17 Taxpayers may find that they have essentially been asked to subsidize a large company whose promise of good jobs never materializes.
These generous packages may not ultimately make a difference, however, in a manufacturer’s decision about whether and where to locate new plants. States have provided generous subsidies to foreign auto companies that, research suggests, would have begun operations in the United States regardless of the supports, in order to strengthen their market share and counteract the effects of import controls.15 By the 1990s, foreign auto-
4
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“Onshoring” has sparked a resurgence of U.S. manufacturing anufacturing in the U.S. is on the rebound.
A few examples:
Between 2010 and 2012, the sector grew by
• General Electric moved its electric water heater
4.3 percent.18 While the share of employment in manu-
production from Mexico to Louisville, Kentucky,
facturing has shrunk rapidly in the decades since the
and hired workers at $13 an hour.26
Second World War, falling from over 40 percent of
• Lenovo, the Beijing computer maker, opened a
private non-farm employment in 1945 to just over
manufacturing plant in Whitsett, North Carolina
10 percent in 2013, there is a core of manufacturing
in 2013,27 due to rising wages in China and the
work (including auto and computers) that is bounc-
ability to offset rising logistics and transportation
ing back and is likely to remain in the United States.
costs by relocating to the United States near a large
Foreign and domestic manufacturers are making major investments in the U.S. market, including BMW’s Spartanburg, South Carolina plant, which is in the midst of a $900 million expansion. From a trough of 19
11.5 million jobs in 2010, manufacturing jobs grew to just over 12 million in 2013.20 Five million workers work
customer base. • Ford, GM, and Caterpillar also moved some operations back to the United States for similar reasons.28 • Ikea opened a furniture factory in Danville, Virginia in 2008. • Airbus is building a new factory in Mobile, Alabama.29
in the United States for foreign firms, and one-third of them work in manufacturing jobs.21
Production and labor costs are no longer that different between international and U.S. based facilities. There
Chinese, Japanese, and U.S. manufacturers are establishing plants in the South in particular, where labor standards are weaker.
has been a “wage convergence” across U.S. locations,30 and international wages have risen while transportation and supply-chain costs have gone up. 31 The gap in wages across states is narrowing: the median wage in Georgia, now the lowest among the “Auto Alley” states, is just 19.8 percent lower than the median in Michigan,
Onshoring by manufacturers is one cause of the domes-
the highest wage on the list. While this gap is not trivial
tic resurgence of manufacturing jobs; they are rebound-
and could be due to differences in composition of jobs,
ing here because wages are lower than they used to be.22
it may not be enough to compel a firm to move a facility
Chinese, Japanese, and U.S. manufacturers are estab-
for savings of this magnitude.
lishing plants in the South in particular, where labor standards are weaker.23 The Boston Consulting Group’s
While the number of returning jobs is not yet making
2012 survey found that 37 percent of the nation’s
a dent in the six million manufacturing jobs lost
largest manufacturers are considering bringing some
between 2000 and 2009, according to the Bureau of
production back to the United States from China.24 The
Labor Statistics, the returning jobs bring hope to local
wage differential between Chinese and U.S. workers is
economies. 32
projected to shrink to $7 an hour by 2015, down from $17 an hour in 2006.25 Many manufacturers have returned to the United States due to their just-in-time production cycles, the increasing costs of shipping and moving heavier and bulkier component parts like auto interiors, proximity to demand and to energy sources or natural resources, and the existence of innovation and R&D capacities.
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3 T
Manufacturing wages are in decline
he decline in relative wages in the manufacturing
• Remington Outdoor Co.—the gun manufacturer—
sector is striking. In most of the post-war period,
is hiring production workers for its new Alabama
manufacturing paid somewhat higher wages than other
manufacturing facility at $11.50 an hour. The project
industries. But this is no longer the case.
is eventually expected to employ 2,000 people. 34 • Texas Power Systems, which supplies engines to
As will be shown below, these reported average wages
the Caterpillar plant in Seguin, Texas, hires workers
are artificially high due to a failure of government data
through a staffing agency for $10.50 an hour.
to account for the lower wages in staffing and tempo-
Workers get a raise to $10.75 if they are hired on as
rary agency–placed jobs in manufacturing. Most of the
direct employees.35
jobs gained since 2009 have been non-union, a key wage
• A Vaughan-Basset Furniture plant in Galax, Virginia
impact for these jobs.33 Note that the decline in average
pays its recent hires $9 an hour. 36
wages in the sector corresponds with the resumption jobs for decades, accelerating between 2000 and 2009.
Manufacturing wages have fallen behind the rest of the private sector.
When manufacturers began growing again, the jobs
The longest view we have on wages is the Census
they added have tended to pay less.
Bureau’s Current Population Survey (CPS), which relies
of its growth—the United States lost manufacturing
on household surveys to track wage data over many
If recent trends continue for the next decade, hourly wages for production workers in manufacturing will be almost 9.0 percent less than for the private sector as a whole.
years. As shown in Figures 1 and 2, from 1976 to 2006, the median wage for manufacturing workers was higher than for private-sector workers as a whole. That changed in 2007, and has continued to decline since. 37 Other data sources, such as the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment Statistics (OES),
The existence of some high-wage manufacturing work-
allow us to look more closely at both industry (“manu-
ers disguises just how many manufacturing workers
facturing” or “motor vehicle assembly”) and occupation
there are at the bottom of the economy. Table 1, below,
(“all production workers”). The OES data, which collects
shows hourly wage cutoff points for each percentile (10,
data from businesses rather than individual workers,
25, median, 75, 90).
shows the median wage for manufacturing workers is 7.7 percent lower than for all workers (public and private
Returning jobs are simply not paying as much as those
sector). 38 When manufacturing workers are compared
that were lost in the recession. Some examples:
to all goods-producing workers (which includes other
• General Electric is producing electric water heaters
blue-collar production occupations such as construc-
in Louisville, Kentucky, where workers are making
tion, logging, and mining), we can see the median wage
$13 an hour.
Table 1. Manufacturing Production Wages by Percentile, 2013 Total Employment in Occupation
Mean Wage
Wage at 10th Percentile
Wage at 25th Percentile
Median Wage
Wage at 75th Percentile
Wage at 90th Percentile
6,163,470
$17.11
$9.60
$11.91
$15.66
$20.76
$27.17
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, data for NAICS Sector 31-33, All Production Occupations (51-0000), May 2013, available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/.
6
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Figure 1. Relative Wages of Manufacturing Workers to All Workers
Figure 2. Pay in Manufacturing Relative to Overall Average (Production Workers) 115%
115% Production Workers
All Workers
105%
105%
100%
100%
95%
95%
90%
90%
19
19 47 19 50 19 53 19 56 19 59 19 62 19 65 19 68 19 71 19 74 19 77 19 80 19 83 19 86 19 89 19 92 19 95 19 98 20 0 20 1 04 20 07 20 10 20 13
110%
89 19 91 19 93 19 95 19 97 19 99 20 01 20 03 20 05 20 07 20 09 20 11 20 13 20 14 20 16 20 18 20 20 20 22 20 24
110%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey.
for manufacturing is 3.6 percent below the average for
the average hourly wage for production workers in the
the goods-producing sector as a whole.
manufacturing sector was close to 10 percent higher
39
than the average for the private sector as a whole. The In 2007, the wage gap reported in the CPS data was
gap peaked in 1985, with wages for manufacturing
fairly modest—$19.57 per hour for all private-sector
workers 7.6 percent higher than the average for the pri-
workers, compared with $19.40 an hour for manu-
vate sector as a whole. Manufacturing wages then began
facturing workers. (Note that the CPS data include a
to fall relative to the private sector as a whole, dropping
somewhat broader group of occupations than the BLS
below the private-sector average in 2007 and continu-
data, so median wages tend to be higher than they
ing to edge downward in subsequent years. (Note: The
would be for production workers alone.) But by 2013, the
sharp drop shown in 1964 is associated with a break in
gap had widened considerably, to 85 cents an hour. If
the series; it does not reflect anything that happened
these recent trends continue for the next decade, hourly
in the economy in that year. )
wages for manufacturing workers will be almost 9.0 percent less than for the private sector as a whole. See
This downward trajectory of manufacturing wages
Figure 1, above.
relative to all private-sector employment cannot be overlooked. If the wage trends continue, manufacturing
In previous decades, the path of wages in manufactur-
jobs will not deliver on the promise of creating livable
ing generally followed the pattern of employment. As
jobs with positive economic revivals in communities
Figure 2 above shows, in the late 1940s and early 1950s,
and families.
Table 2. Changes in Real Wages, All Manufacturing Workers, 2003–2013
Year
Total Employment in Occupation
Mean Wage
Wage at 10th Percentile
Wage at 25th Percentile
Median Wage
Wage at 75th Percentile
Wage at 90th Percentile
2003
7,456,360
$18.04
$10.15
$12.57
$16.38
$22.11
$29.38
2013
6,163,470
$17.11
$9.60
$11.91
$15.66
$20.76
$27.17
-5.2%
-5.4%
-5.3%
-4.4%
-4.7%
-6.1%
Change
Source: Calculations by the authors. (Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, data for NAICS Sector 31-33, All Production Occupations (51-0000), May 2003 and May 2013, available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/.)
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The hidden reality of low-wage manufacturing workers. When people say they support bringing manufacturing jobs to their community, they are probably thinking of those positions at the higher end of the wage scale. Fortunately, there are still some of those high-wage manufacturing jobs left. They disguise the fact that millions of manufacturing workers are at the bottom of the wage spectrum, however. The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) data report wages by percentiles, which provides more detail about what is happening to workers than what is apparent through the reported averages. The 10th percentile, for example, means that 10 percent of workers make at or below that wage rate. The 25th percentile means one-quarter of workers make at or below that wage rate, and so on.
Manufacturing wages are not even keeping up with inflation.
The OES data reports that in 2013, there were approxi-
Wages in manufacturing are not keeping up with
ing. More than 600,000 of those workers make just
inflation. As shown in Table 2 on the previous page,
$9.60 or less, and more than 1.5 million of those workers
the median wage for all manufacturing workers in the
make $11.91 or less.41 See Figure 3, below.
40
mately 6.2 million production workers in manufactur-
United States is $15.66 per hour. In real terms, however, since 2003, the inflation-adjusted median hourly wage for manufacturing workers has declined by nearly
Figure 3. Distribution of Hourly Wages for Manufacturing (Production) Workers
$1.00 an hour, from $16.38 to $15.66 (in 2013 dollars). That amounts to a drop of over 4 percent. For a manufacturing worker who works 40 hours a week, 52 weeks per year, that translates to a drop in income of about
Looking closer, the data reveal that there have been similar declines in real wages across all income categories.
8
$7.25
$9.60
3,081,735 workers
616,347 workers
The public assumes that manufacturing jobs are highly paid, but the reality is that millions of manufacturing workers are at the bottom of the wage scale.
1,540,868 workers
$2,000 a year.
$11.91
$15.66
$20.76
$27.17
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, data for NAICS Sector 31-33, All Production Occupations (51-0000), May 2013, available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/.
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Case Study: The changing nature of automotive work
otor vehicle manufacturing and supply is a significant sector in our economy, and is the
words, today 72 percent of autoworkers—nearly three out of every four—are in the parts sector. That number
largest manufacturing sector.42 Employment in the auto
is significant because, according to data from the
sector has followed the same general downward path
Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median wage for workers
as manufacturing as a whole, although the sector’s jobs
in the auto parts sector is one-third less (36 percent)
have rebounded since 2009. At the start of the 1950s,
than for a worker in a final vehicle assembly plant.44
autoworkers accounted for more than 2.0 percent of
Further, auto suppliers—like many other manufac-
private-sector employment. This share has dropped to
turers—are increasingly turning to staffing and temp
just 0.7 percent in the last decade. But, auto has added
firms to supply their labor. The industry has been
over 340,000 jobs since the 2009 fallout, according to
a multi-tiered one for decades, and the sometimes-
the U.S. Treasury, making it one of the few sectors in
elaborate supply chain matrix has grown more complex
this recovery that is relatively healthy. By taking a
in recent years. Auto suppliers have begun to outsource
closer look at this group of manufacturing workers—
their labor supply to staffing and temporary firms, as
especially workers in the parts sector, who tend to be
described below, creating yet another level of con-
paid less—we can gain some insight into some of the
tracted work in the industry and lowering wages even
factors that are driving down wages across the manu-
further. As shown below, the reported median wage in
facturing sector.
auto parts manufacturing is around $15 an hour, but
43
this is inflated because of some still relatively higherThus, the definition of what an auto job is has changed
paying jobs in union shops or higher-skilled positions
over the years, with significant consequences for the
in the industry, and because jobs placed by staffing or
wages of workers in this sector. In addition to the drop
temporary firms that pay less are measured separately.
in its share of total employment, there has also been sector, changing the way the industry operates and
The U.S. auto industry is seeing an impressive rebound.
altering the quality of the average job. Throughout
As the economy collapsed and auto production in the
the 1960s, when wages were at their peak, the share
United States bottomed out in 2009, every automaker—
of autoworkers employed in auto assembly plants had
foreign and domestic—scaled back production and
been close to 50 percent, when wages were at their peak
laid off workers.45 Since then, U.S. auto production has
in the industry. It began to decline slightly in the early
rebounded, from a low of 5.7 million vehicles in 2009 to
1970s, but was still almost 46 percent in the mid-1980s.
11.1 million vehicles in 2013.46 This rebound is reflected
a substantial change in the employment mix in the
Today, 72% of autoworkers are employed in the auto parts sector, where wages are much lower. Parts suppliers increasingly rely on staffing firms for labor.
both in the number of jobs in the U.S. auto industry and the amount of investment that automakers have made in their U.S. production plants. Foreign and domestic companies have added 350,000 new jobs at their U.S. auto assembly and parts plants since the auto crisis in 2009. They have made $38 billion in capital investment
Between 1980 and 1990, the mix shifted dramatically.
since 2009.47 This suggests a commitment by U.S. and
In 1980, 49 percent of autoworkers were in the sup-
foreign producers to keep jobs in the United States.
plier sector, and by 1990, it had climbed to 69 percent. Growth in the supplier or parts sector since 1990 has
New jobs and more investment are good news. Major
been comparatively marginal. In 2013, according to
investments in U.S. factories makes it more likely that
Current Employment Survey data, there were 147,400
these jobs will stay in the United States, and as long
auto assembly production workers and 384,500 produc-
as automakers are assembling cars here, there are
tion workers employed by auto parts suppliers. In other
economic incentives for them to maintain a significant
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9
network of parts plants here as well, given the demands
that communities work so hard to retract and retain—
of just-in-time production, high shipping costs for
saw the most dramatic decline. The wage at the 75th
certain types of parts, and the desire to reduce or
percentile—presumably, the most skilled and experi-
eliminate the costs of warehousing and inventory of
enced employees—plummeted by 29 percent. In auto
parts. While the manufacturing of certain automotive
assembly, real wages fell by 21 percent during that
components—such as airbags, wiring harnesses, seat-
same period.
belts, and audio systems—have largely moved outside of the United States, there are economic incentives for
The median wage for auto parts workers is $15.83 an
many other parts to be produced domestically, near the
hour, still 17 cents an hour above the median for all
assembly plants they supply. These include parts of the
manufacturing workers. One out of ten auto parts work-
car that are too heavy or bulky to ship, as well as parts
ers makes less than $10.38 an hour, and approximately
built essentially to order in just-in-time plants where
one out of every four makes less than $12.63—just
inventory is measured in hours, not days or weeks.
slightly above the average for all manufacturing workers.
But the quality of automotive jobs is declining.
As Table 4 on the next page shows, median wages for
Historically, average pay in the auto industry far out-
autoworkers are falling significantly faster than for
paced other private-sector jobs. In the 1950s and 1960s,
manufacturing workers as a whole. Median wages for
the industry-wide average wage was roughly 30 per-
auto parts workers, for example, fell three times faster
cent higher than the average for the private sector as a
than wages for manufacturing workers as a whole, and
whole. It then rose relative to the private-sector average
nine times faster than the average for all occupations.
in the 1970s, peaking in the mid-1980s at more than 150
Motor vehicle manufacturing fell nearly five times
percent of the average private-sector wage.
faster than the average for all manufacturing workers.48 Because auto companies factor in labor costs when they
But by many measures—because of the declines in the
decide whether to do work in-house or contract with a
relative pay in the parts sector and also the decline
supplier, lower wages in the supplier sector can drag
in the share of workers employed in auto assembly
down wages at the final assembly plants as well.
plants—average pay for autoworkers is now comparable to pay in the rest of the private sector.
The auto jobs being created are worse than the ones lost.
As Table 3 below shows, between 2003 and 2013, the
The wage trends in the automotive sector track the
real (inflation-adjusted) wage for auto parts workers
trends in overall manufacturing: the replacement jobs
fell by 13.7 percent. Auto parts workers toward the
following the auto crisis and recession are not on a par
top of the pay scale—the “good manufacturing jobs”
with those that were lost.
Table 3. Changes in Real Wages, Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing Workers, 2003–2013 Year
Wage at 10th Percentile
Wage at 25th Percentile
Median Wage
Wage at 75th Percentile
Wage at 90th Percentile
2003
$11.61
$14.26
$18.35
$28.41
$36.54
2013
$10.38
$12.63
$15.83
$20.17
$27.13
Change
-10.6%
-11.4%
-13.7%
-29.0%
-25.8%
Source: Calculations by the authors. (Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, data for NAICS Code 3363, All Production Occupations (51-0000), May 2003 and May 2013, available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/.)
10
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
Table 4. Comparison of Real Wages, 2003–2013, Manufacturing Occupations vs. All Occupations Year
All Occupations
All Manufacturing
Motor Vehicle Manufacturing
Parts Manufacturing
2003
$17.13
$16.38
$31.45
$18.35
2004
$17.06
$16.16
$31.09
$18.26
2005
$16.88
$15.90
$28.38
$17.74
2006
$16.88
$15.76
$28.37
$17.43
2007
$16.97
$15.73
$29.09
$16.99
2008
$16.85
$15.65
$29.37
$16.49
2009
$17.32
$16.10
$29.62
$16.74
2010
$17.38
$16.10
$27.93
$16.69
2011
$17.16
$15.88
$26.11
$16.53
2012
$16.95
$15.74
$25.21
$16.14
2013
$16.87
$15.66
$24.83
$15.83
% Change
-1.52%
-4.40%
-21.05%
-13.73%
Source: Calculations by the authors. (Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, All Production Occupations (51-0000) for NAICS Sector 31-33 and NAICS Codes 3361 and 3363, and All Occupations (00-0000), May 2003 and May 2013, available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/.)
Alabama: Auto Jobs on the Rise, But Paychecks Decline Alabama refers to itself as the “center of the Southeast’s auto industry,”49 and with good reason. Before 1997, when Mercedes opened the first auto assembly plant in the state, the Alabama automotive industry was nearly non-existent. Then, Honda opened a plant in Alabama in 2001, followed by Hyundai in 2005.50 Kia built its plant in West Point, Georgia, on the Alabama border, in 2010.51 Toyota has also made engines in Huntsville, Alabama, since 2003.52 Today, there are 12,800 workers employed at auto assembly plants in the state, and another 20,700 at parts suppliers. Since 2001, the number of auto parts workers in Alabama has grown by 64 percent. But while the number of auto jobs in Alabama has been on the rise, paychecks have been on the decline. From 2001 to 2013, real (inflation-adjusted) monthly earnings for Alabama auto parts workers have declined by 42 percent—more than any other major auto-producing state. The average Alabama auto parts worker took home $1,593 less in 2013 than he or she did in 2001.53 What may be contributing to these falling wages, even as the Alabama auto industry thrives? There are several likely factors:54
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
• New hires are taking home about $600 less per month than the typical auto parts worker in the state—17 percent below the statewide average. The significant number of new hires in Alabama—both in terms of new auto parts jobs coming to the state, and the significant turnover in existing jobs—contribute to pulling down the average wage for autoworkers overall. • In the period from 2001 to 2013, the number of young auto parts workers (aged 19 to 34) nearly tripled—a growth rate twice as fast as the Alabama auto parts industry as a whole. • Young workers tend to make less than older workers. In Alabama, the monthly incomes of auto parts workers under 22 are two-thirds of the state average wage for that sector. Workers aged 22 to 24 make three-quarters of the average. • Meanwhile, older workers have seen their wages go backwards. Alabama auto parts workers 45 and older saw real wages decline by 50 percent or more from 2001 and 2013. Workers aged 35 to 44 saw real wages shrink by onethird over that same period.
11
In addition to the evidence cited above, state-level data on the auto industry taken from the Census Bureau’s Quarterly Workforce Indicators—which measures quarterly earnings, not hourly wages—can
Table 5. Monthly Earnings, Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing Workers, New Hires vs. All Workers State
% Difference for New Hires
Michigan
-28%
Indiana
-27%
Tennessee, Mississippi, South Carolina, Alabama,
Ohio
-25%
and Georgia.
South Carolina
-24%
Tennessee
-23%
Kentucky
-18%
Alabama
-17%
Illinois
-16%
has new hires collecting monthly earnings similar
Georgia
-7%
to the statewide average for parts workers. In every
Mississippi
1%
shed some additional light on trends affecting workers. Auto manufacturing is concentrated in a relatively small number of states, known as the “Auto Alley”— mainly Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky,
Median wages for autoworkers are falling significantly faster than for manufacturing workers as a whole. For auto parts workers, just one state—Mississippi—
other state, new-hire wages are dramatically lower. See Table 5, top right. In 5 of the 10 states, monthly incomes for new hires are around one-quarter less
Source: Calculations by the authors (U.S. Census Bureau, Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics, Quarterly Workforce Indicators, 2013, NAICS Code 3363, available at http://lehd.ces.census.gov/.)
than the state average.
Real monthly earnings are declining for all autoworkers, not just new hires. In a majority of Auto Alley states, parts workers have
Table 6. Change In Monthly Earnings, 2001-2013, Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing Workers
from 2001 to 2013. See Table 6, bottom right. Kentucky
State
% Difference in Monthly Earnings, 2003–2013
and Georgia—the two states with the lowest monthly
Alabama
-24.0%
Mississippi
-13.6%
in monthly earnings at 24 percent, a worker’s monthly
Indiana
-12.1%
paycheck was $1,200 less in 2013 than in 2001.
Ohio
-9.4%
Michigan
-3.3%
Illinois
-1.6%
Georgia
3.8%
Kentucky
7.9%
Tennessee
8.0%
South Carolina
13.3%
seen real (inflation-adjusted) monthly earnings decline
earnings in 2001—saw increases, along with South Carolina. In Alabama, which saw the largest decline
Source: Calculations by the authors. (U.S. Census Bureau, Longitudinal Employer-Household Dynamics, Quarterly Workforce Indicators, 2001 and 2013, NAICS Code 3363, available at http://lehd.ces.census.gov/.)
12
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
5 O
Heavy reliance on staffing agencies obscures much deeper problems in manufacturing
ften lost in the official numbers on employment fluctuations and wage trends is a closely related
but not well-tracked trend that has reshaped manufacturing jobs over the past two decades: domestic outsourcing. Workers looking for a manufacturing job, and especially one in an auto plant today, increasingly find that the only open positions are placed by staffing agencies that pay lower wages and provide fewer benefits as compared with direct hires, and that offer limited opportunities to secure a permanent-employee position. Government data fail to include staffing agency workers in the official counts for manufacturing workers and fail to factor their wages into industry averages, however, making it difficult to track this trend with precision. Yet existing data sources offer ample evidence of this dramatic trend in manufacturing and the extent to which it has degraded jobs; these sources are substantiated by anecdotal evidence from workers and from the many towns where manufacturing plants
Second, manufacturing employers began to rely more
have blossomed with the support of generous subsidies
heavily on staffing services to fill core production and
but have failed to provide family-supporting jobs.
low-skilled manual occupations as opposed to only for peripheral functions, such as janitorial.60 In 1989, less
Manufacturing firms are increasingly turning to staffing and temporary agencies to hire their workers.
than 1 percent of all production workers were employed
In the two decades from 1989 to 2009, two emergent
in other manual occupations: 6.4 percent of all help-
labor market trends reshaped the nature of manufac-
ers, laborers, and hand material movers in 1989 were
turing jobs. First, manufacturers looked to the staffing
employed by staffing agencies, rising to 15.6 percent by
services industry to source their production workers,
2000.62 In 1989, there were approximately 43 direct-hire
creating a shift in the types of jobs that staffing com-
workers for every one staffing agency worker in manu-
panies placed: that is, increasingly “blue collar” and
facturing, but by 2000, researchers estimate that this
other manual labor, rather than the office-based clerical
ratio had dropped to 12 to 1.63 And data suggest that the
jobs that defined the staffing industry in earlier years.
trend has continued, with the staffing agency sector
The number of staffing agency workers assigned to
adding 9.2 percent, or 1.3 million workers, to direct-
manufacturing grew by about one million from 1989 to
hire manufacturing in 2006, the last year this data is
2000, from about 419,000 workers to almost 1.4 mil-
available, as compared with 2.3 percent in 1989 and 8.2
lion, and data suggests that this trend continues. 56 In
percent in 2000. Staffing agencies made an even more
1990, 42 percent of staffing agency jobs were office and
dramatic addition to low-skilled manual occupations in
administrative support work, while only 28 percent
2006, where for every 100 low-skilled manual laborers
were blue-collar positions. This balance had reversed
directly hired by manufacturing employers, there were
by 2006, with blue-collar workers accounting for 44
another 35 low-skilled manual laborers hired by staffing
percent of staffing agency jobs. Industrial and factory
agencies.64
55
57
58
by staffing agencies, but by 2000, that fraction had risen to 6.1 percent.61 This upward trend was mirrored
staffing now form the single largest source of revenue for the staffing industry.59
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
13
Figure 4. Team Assemblers, Change in Employment, 2002–2013
Outsourcing dramatically affects job-growth and wage-level numbers. Taking into account the rise of outsourcing dramatically alters measures of manufacturing employment
-7.01%
All Team Assemblers
and of labor productivity.65 While measured manufacturing employment declined by 4.1 percent from 1989 Temporary Team Assemblers
to 2000, if staffing agency workers (who usually work alongside and under the same supervision as direct-hire employees) were counted, manufacturing employment would have actually risen by 1.3 percent.66 Factoring in
-10%
-5%
0
5%
10%
16.70%
15%
20%
Source: Unpublished Census Bureau data, on file with the authors.
manufacturers’ use of staffing agency workers does not erase the long declines in manufacturing employment
manufacturing. For the first two quarters of 2014, this
since 2000, but it does show that an increasing share of
data show that auto parts manufacturers used staffing
manufacturing work is being done by staffing agency
agencies to supply 13.5 to 14.5 percent of their work-
workers.
force.71 Assuming that the currently reported 318,02072
67
auto parts production workers only represent 85.5 perFor instance, the growth of outsourcing and the related
cent of workers on the shop floor, an additional 53,933
decline in wages is apparent in the NAICS data on the
staffing agency workers (and 17,623 agency-employed
occupation of Team Assemblers—essentially, assembly
Team Assemblers) are unaccounted for in official indus-
line workers—which represents the largest category
try figures. This is significant, because the median wage
of production workers in manufacturing. Since 2002,
of Team Assemblers working through staffing agencies
the number of temporary Team Assemblers across all
is 29 percent lower than Team Assemblers directly
industries has grown from 57,520 (5.0 percent of all
hired in the auto parts industry.73
team assemblers) in 2002, to 176,590 (16.7 percent) in 2013.68 Over the same time period, the total number
The growth of agency-employed production workers
of Team Assemblers, across all industries, shrunk 7.1
and their below-industry-standard wages may help
percent. See Figure 4, at right. This means temporary
explain in part the fall in auto parts production wages
workers are playing an increasing part of a continuously
over the past decade. Between 2003 and 2013, real
shrinking manufacturing pie.
(inflation-adjusted) wages for Team Assemblers in
69
70
the auto parts industry fell $1.47 an hour (9.2 percent), Unpublished Census Bureau data suggests this econo-
while real wages for all auto part production workers
my-wide distribution of temporary Team Assemblers is
fell $2.77 an hour (15 percent). The degradation we see
mimicked within the auto parts sector. The Quarterly
in the industry therefore looks closely connected to
Survey of Plant Capacity records, but does not publish,
the increased outsourcing of jobs to temporary staffing
the number of staffing agency workers assigned to
agencies. See Table 7, below.
Table 7. Team Assembler Wages by Industry Industry
Mean Wage
Wage at 10th Percentile
Wage at 25th Percentile
Median Wage
Wage at 75th Percentile
Wage at 90th Percentile
Auto Parts
$15.56
$10.21
$12.17
$14.54
$17.72
$23.14
Temp Agencies
$11.36
$8.12
$8.87
$10.33
$12.67
$16.79
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, data for NAICS Codes 3363 and 5631, Team Assemblers (51-2092), May 2013, available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/.
14
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
Conclusion Anecdotal reports show that more auto plants are hiring via staffing and temporary agencies, with poorer working conditions.
J
obs in manufacturing and auto, important growthgenerating industries, are not as good as they
once were. New hires in auto earn less than $10 an
Numerous press stories profile workers with few options
hour. What will these jobs look like in 10 years if these
as the factories in their towns replaced the employees
trends continue? The ramifications for the workers,
laid off during the recession with staffing agency work-
the communities that are hosting these jobs, and the
ers, and as foreign auto manufacturers that established
U.S. economy are far-reaching, and include increasing
plants in the South starting in the 1990s are relying
inequality as middle-class jobs do not return, drains
heavily on staffing agencies to provide labor. Some
on taxpayers as local and federal subsidies fail to alter
companies abruptly converted their existing employ-
manufacturers’ behavior and fail to deliver quality
ees to “temporary” employment. Employees at A&E
jobs, and a lack of accountability for businesses that
Services, a small auto parts manufacturer in Chicago,
seek only to enhance profits at the expense of working
for example, learned that their firm would “no longer
families and local communities.
hold general labor employees on its payroll” and that they would have to agree to work through a temporary
The promise of manufacturing and auto, its largest
staffing agency if they wanted to keep their jobs.
component industry, is not lost, however. The govern-
74
ment can resurrect the collection of credible data Workers feel these shifts deeply. In addition to the
on temporary and staffing jobs again to better under-
Philip Hicks story mentioned above in the introduc-
stand the impact those structures have on jobs and
tion, Betty McCray found herself in a similar situation
communities, and public entities providing subsidies
when she took a job at a Nissan Auto plant in Smyrna,
should track results and hold recipients of hard-
Tennessee, preparing parts for the assembly line.
earned taxpayer dollars to account for the quality of
Although she works alongside permanent Nissan
the jobs created. This information will allow policy-
employees, as a staffing agency worker, she is paid less,
makers, manufacturers and the public to invest in
gets no personal days, and has to bring in a doctor’s
good jobs that will sustain our communities for the
note in order to get a sick day.
decades to come. n
75
76
The growth of the fiercely competitive auto parts supply sector and its heavy use of outsourcing can also have serious implications for workers’ health and safety. Under intense pressure by auto companies to maximize output while constraining labor costs, suppliers and their contractors may choose to ignore safety precautions in an attempt to cut the bottom line.77 Workers hired for temporary agency positions are unlikely to speak up and are much less likely to be able to seek support in a union, which have historically monitored safety conditions at the major auto company plants that are their base.78 This dynamic, combined with lax occupational safety and health standards and enforcement, and the prevalence of dangerous chemicals in auto seating and other parts supply, has proven hazardous for workers, who have developed sinus infections, chronic coughs, bronchitis, shortness of breath and asthma.79
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
15
Endnotes 1.
Jonathan Weisman, “Permanent Job Proves an Elusive Dream,” Washington Post, October 11, 2004, 1-2, http://www. washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A22773-2004Oct10.html.
2.
Id.
3.
See Economic Development Partnership of Alabama, Alabama Industry Profile: Automotive Industry, 2007, https://aama. memberclicks.net/assets/docs/auto_profile.pdf; Georgia Power Community & Economic Development, Automotive Manufacturing in Georgia, 2014; Ohio Department of Development, The Ohio Motor Vehicle Industry, February 2011; Darla Moore School of Business, The Economic Impact of South Carolina’s Automotive Cluster (Columbia, South Carolina:University of South Carolina, January 2011); Brookings Advanced Industries Series, Drive! Moving Tennessee’s Automotive Sector Up the Value Chain (Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program, 2013).
4.
20. Calculations by the authors (Bureau of Labor Statistics). 21.
James Fallows, “Made in America, Again,” The Atlantic, October 2014, 22-23.
22. According to the Boston Consulting Group, companies find the United States attractive because of its low labor costs relative to Europe and Japan. Brad Plumer, “Is U.S. Manufacturing Making a Comeback – or Is It Just Hype?,” Washington Post Wonkblog, May 1, 2013. 23. Id. 24. Id.; Id.; “BMW Manufacturing News Center.” BMW US Factory BMW Expands Export Operation from South Carolina Comments. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Nov. 2014. 25. Plumer, “Is U.S. Manufacturing Making a Comeback”. 26. Wessel and Hagerty, “Remade in the USA”.
See Deloitte Manufacturing Institute, Leadership Wanted: U.S. Public Opinions on Manufacturing (2012 Annual Index), 9; George Heaton et al., Manufacturing Issues in the 2012 United States Presidential Campaign (Technology Policy International, June 30, 2012); Toplines polling data commissioned by the Alliance for American Manufacturing (Steelworkers), http:// americanmanufacturing.org/.
27.
5.
See id., note 1.
29. Id.
6.
Philip Mattera, et al., Money for Something:Job Creation and Job Quality Standards in State Economic Development Subsidy Programs (Washington, D.C.: Good Jobs First, December 2011), http://www.goodjobsfirst.org/sites/default/files/docs/pdf/ moneyforsomething.pdf.
30. Calculations by the authors (Occupational Employment Statistics mean and median wages by state).
7.
Id.
33. Plumer, “Is U.S. Manufacturing Making a Comeback?”
8.
Id.
9.
Id. at 19.
34. “How to Apply for a Production Job at New $110M Remington Gun Plant in Huntsville,” Al.com, http://www.al.com/business/index. ssf/2014/06/remington_huntsville_jobs_guns.html.
10.
Motoko Rich, “Private Sector Gets Job Skills; Public Gets Bill,” New York Times, January 7, 2012, at http://www.nytimes. com/2012/01/08/business/states-pay-to-train-workers-tocompanies-benefit.html?pagewanted=all.
11.
Id.
12.
“Alabama’s Largest Incentives Packages in Last 20 Years,” Business Alabama, http://www.businessalabama.com/Incentives. pdf (based on data from Good Jobs First).
13.
Philip Mattera, Kasia Tarczynska, and Greg LeRoy, Megadeals: The Largest Economic Development Subsidy Packages Ever Awarded by State and Local Governments in the United States (Washington, D.C.: Good Jobs First, June 2013),http://www. goodjobsfirst.org/sites/default/files/docs/pdf/megadeals_report. pdf
Plumer, “Is U.S. Manufacturing Making a Comeback”.
28. Id. GM is moving the Cadillac SRX, the brand’s best seller, to Spring Hill, TN. “Cadillac SRX Production Moving to TN, NextGen Equinox Going to Mexico,” AutoBlog, accessed November 5, 2014, http://www.autoblog.com/2014/08/29/cadillac-srx-springhill-chevy-equinox-mexico/.
31.
Brookings Institute, Drive!, at v, 24.
32. Id.
35. Sanford Nowlin, “Caterpillar Supplier Eyes More Hiring, Ading Third Production Line,” San Antonio Business Journal, October 28, 2011, http://www.bizjournals.com/sanantonio/ print-edition/2011/10/28/caterpillar-supplier-eyes-more-hiring. html?page=all. 36. Id. 37.
U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey.
38. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, NAICS Sectors 31-33, All Production Occupations (SOC Code 51-000) compared to All Private and Public Sector Workers (SOC Code 00-0000).
14.
“Case Study of Foreign Auto Assembly Plants,” Good Jobs First, accessed October 20, 2014, http://www.goodjobsfirst.org/ corporate-subsidy-watch/foreign-auto-plants.
15.
Id.
39. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Economic News Release, “Table B-3: Average Hourly and Weekly Earnings of All Employees on Private Nonfarm Payrolls by Industry Sector, Seasonally Adjusted,” available at http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit. t19.htm. Based on OES Establishment data. Note that these medians include all occupation codes, not just production occupations, so that median wages are significantly higher.
16.
Id.
40. Wessel and Hagerty, “Remade in the USA”.
17.
Id.
18.
David Wessel and James Hagerty, “Remade in the USA: Flat Wages Help Fuel Rebound in Manufacturing,” The Wall Street Journal, May 29, 2012.
41. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, NAICS Code 31-33 (Manufacturing), Production Occupations (Occupation Code 51-0000), available at http://www.bls.gov/oes/, accessed October 2014.
19.
“BMW Manufacturing News Center.” BMW US Factory BMW Expands Export Operation from South Carolina Comments. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Nov. 2014
16
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
42. Thomas Klier and James Rubenstein, Who Really Made Your Car? Restructuring and Geographic Change in the Auto Industry (Kalamazoo, WI: W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2008). 43. U.S. Department of the Treasury, “TARP Programs: Auto Industry,” last modified October 14, 2014, http://www.treasury. gov/initiatives/financial-stability/TARP-Programs/automotiveprograms/Pages/default.aspx 44. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics. 45. Drew Speier, “Toyota Layoffs Shock Workers,” WFIE News14 (Evansville, IN), available at http://www.14news.com/ story/6435509/toyota-layoffs-shock-workers, accessed November 10, 2014; Jeffrey Collins, “Layoffs Ahead for S.C. Temp Workers at BMW,” Charlotte Observer, October 18, 2008, available at http:// www.charlotteobserver.com/2008/10/18/261224_layoffs-aheadfor-sc-temp-workers.html#.VGEgfTTF9yw, accessed November 10, 2014; Ralph Kisiel, “Honda Axes Factory Temps as Output Falls,” Automotive News, March 9, 2009, available at http:// www.autonews.com/article/20090309/OEM01/303099843/ honda-axes-factory-temps-as-output-falls, November 10, 2014; “Mercedes Layoffs Not Sign of Healing Economy,” Tuscaloosa News, September 17, 2009, available at http://www. tuscaloosanews.com/article/20090917/NEWS/909169969, accessed November 10, 2014; Ian Rowley, “After Huge Loss, Nissan Plans More Layoffs,” Bloomberg Business Week, February 9, 2009, available at http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/ content/feb2009/gb2009029_103868.htm, accessed November 10, 2014; Michael Harley, “Hyundai to Slow Production of Santa Fe, Sonata,” Autoblog.com, October 19, 2008, available at http://www. autoblog.com/2008/10/19/hyundai-to-slow-production-of-santafe-sonata/, accessed November 10, 2014. 46. Calculations by the authors (“United States Vehicle Production by Manufacturer,” WardsAuto, available at www.WardsAuto.com, accessed October 26, 2014). 47.
State of the U.S. Automotive Industry:Investment, Innovation, Jobs and America’s Economic Competitiveness (Washington, D.C.: American Automotive Policy Council, June 2014), http://www. americanautocouncil.org/sites/default/files/State_Of_The_US_ Automotive_Industry_2014.pdf.
48. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics, including data for All Occupations (SOC Code 00-000) and production workers (SOC Code 51-000) for all manufacturing workers (NAICS 31-33), Motor Vehicle Manufacturing (NAICS 3361), and Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing (NAICS 3363), http://www.bls.gov/oes/, accessed October 2014. 49. Economic Development Partnership of Alabama, Alabama Dept. of Commerce, “Alabama Automotive Industry Profile,” 2, accessed October 11, 2014, http://www.madeinalabama.com/ assets/2013/01/automotive-industry-profile.pdf.
53. U.S. Census Bureau, Quarterly Workforce Indicators, NAICS Code 3363 (Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing), available at http:// ledextract.ces.census.gov/. Calculations by the authors. 54. U.S. Census Bureau, Quarterly Workforce Indicators, NAICS Code 3363 (Motor Vehicle Parts Manufacturing), available at http:// ledextract.ces.census.gov/. Calculations by the authors. 55. Matthew Dey, Susan N. Houseman & Anne E. Polivka, Manufacturers’ Outsourcing to Staffing Services, 65 Indus. & Lab. Rel. Rev. 533 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University ILR School, June 2012), http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi? article=2126&context=ilrreview. 56. Id. at 548-49. 57.
Id. at 543.
58. Id. 59.
Rebecca Smith and Claire McKenna, Temped Out: How the Domestic Outsourcing of Blue-Collar Jobs Hurts America’s Workers (New York, NY: National Employment Law Project & National Staffing Workers Alliance, 2014), 4,http://www.nelp.org/page/-/ Reports/Temped-Out.pdf?nocdn=1, citing Jeremy Edwards, IBISWorld Industry Report 56132, Office Staffing & Temp Agencies in the US (2014).
60. Dey, Manufacturers’ Outsourcing at 534. 61.
Id. at 547.
62. Id. at 547-48. 63. Id. at 549 64. Id. at 557. 65. Id. at 534. 66. Id. at 557 67.
Id.
68. Unpublished Census Bureau data, on file with authors. 69. Id. 70. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment Statistics data sets. Retrieved on June 23, 2014 from http://www.bls.gov/ oes/tables.htm. 71.
U.S. Census Bureau (2014). Quarterly Survey of Plant Capacity. Unpublished data.
72. Bureau of Labor Statistics (May, 2013). Occupational Employment Statistics. Retrieved October 22, 2014 from http://www.bls.gov/ oes/tables.htm 73.
Id.
74. Weisman, “Permanent Job Proves an Elusive Dream,” 1-2. Sarah Jaffe, “Forever Temp?,” In These Times, January 6, 2014,http://inthesetimes.com/article/15972/permatemps_in_ manufacturing.
50. “Automotive Hub of the South,” Amazing Alabama, Alabama Power Corp., accessed October 11, 2014, http://www. amazingalabama.com/key-industry-targets-automotive.html.
75.
51.
76. Id.
Kia Motor Manufacturing Georgia, “Our History,” accessed October 11, 2014, http://www.kmmgusa.com/about-kmmg/ourhistory.
52. “Toyota Marks Milestone 3-Millionth Alabama-Made Engine,” (Alabama Dept. of Commerce, February 18, 2014) http://www. madeinalabama.com/2014/02/milestone-3-millionth-alabamamade-engine,.
77.
78. Id. at 4. 79.
NELP | Manufacturing Low PAY
Seth Freed Wessler, “What’s Making These Selma, Alabama Auto Parts Workers So Sick”, NBC News, In Plain Sight, July 14, 2014,http://www.nbcnews.com/feature/in-plain-sight/whatsmaking-these-selma-alabama-auto-parts-workers-so-sickn150136.
Id.
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